World Cup 2010: South Africans ready for 'Bafana Bafana' ready to 'surprise the world'

Despite the predictions of soccer analysts, South Africans are convinced that their national team – also known as the Bafana Bafana – will shine in the World Cup. They play Mexico in the opening game on Friday.

ByScott Baldauf, Staff writerJune 9, 2010

The statement, coming just days before the World Cup, could only be about football – or soccer as it is known in certain parts of the world.

The man speaking is wearing the yellow and green T-shirt of South Africa’s national team, nicknamed Bafana Bafana, so I can guess who the “we” is that he is speaking of. He’s sitting at a bar in northern Johannesburg with a big TV screen playing a “friendly” match between Switzerland and Italy that ends in a draw.

Since I arrived in South Africa, in 2006, the country seems to have gone from corruption scandal to high-profile trial in an endless tale of self-destruction.

In April, after the murder of a racist white politician that prompted threats of a “machete race war” and summoned up surprising levels of sympathy from white folks who shared few of the racist politicians ideas, South Africans seemed to think their country was on a fast path to Zimbabwe-hood.

One South African columnist, Aubrey Matshiqi, summed up the country’s mood perfectly by calling it “hysterical pessimism.”

Now, thankfully, the mood has swung the other way.

Maybe there is something about "the beautiful game."

I had finished my chips, as French fries are known in certain parts of the world, so I began to ask people at the bar about who was going to win the World Cup.

Netherlands is going to surprise people, he says. Brazil cannot be counted out. And the Americans, the Americans are looking very strong.

James, a white college student recently transplanted from Zimbabwe, says he loves the fact that football seems to be bringing people together, and he would love to see Bafana Bafana go all the way to the final. But his final four includes Spain, Argentina, Netherlands, and England.

Sipho, the man in the yellow Bafana shirt, would also love to support Bafana.

“They have come a long way,” he admits, noting that South Africa had just won a “friendly” against Denmark, and they remain undefeated for the past eight weeks.

But asked for his final four, he doesn’t make place for Bafana Bafana.

He doesn’t even make room for Brazil.

“Oh, you like Brazil?” he asks me. “Okay, let’s talk about the final eight.”